Blowing Bubbles in the Cosmos

Astronomical Winds, Jets, and Explosions

T. W. Hartquist, J. E. Dyson, and D. P. Ruffle

|c Mathematical Appendix

Blowing Bubbles in the Cosmos

Astronomical Winds, Jets, and Explosions

T. W. Hartquist, J. E. Dyson, and D. P. Ruffle

Description

Many astrophysical bodies produce winds, jets or explosions, which blow spectacular bubbles. From a nonmathematical, unifying perspective, based on the understanding of bubbles, the authors address many of the most exciting topics in modern astrophysics including supernovae, the production of structure in the Early Universe, the environments of supermassive black holes and gamma-ray bursts.

Blowing Bubbles in the Cosmos

Astronomical Winds, Jets, and Explosions

T. W. Hartquist, J. E. Dyson, and D. P. Ruffle

Table of Contents

1. The First Discoveries of Astronomical Winds2. The Magnitudes of Astronomical Quantities3. Stellar Evolution4. Basic Structures of Winds and Windblown Bubbles5. Star Formation and Low-Mass Young Stellar Objects6. Regions of High-Mass Star Formation7. Winds from Main-Sequence and Post-Main-Sequence Stars8. Supernovae and Their Remnants9. Galactic Winds, Starburst Superwinds, and the Epoch of Galaxy Formation10. Active Galaxies and Their Nuclei11. Some Other Windy and Explosive Sources

Blowing Bubbles in the Cosmos

Astronomical Winds, Jets, and Explosions

T. W. Hartquist, J. E. Dyson, and D. P. Ruffle

Reviews and Awards

"Three astrophysicists from Leeds University diverge from many studies by focusing not on a particular source of radiation, but on a set of phenomena produced by a wide range of them. The underlying pictures required for such a study, they say, are simple, limited in type, and highly adaptable, and thus suitable to introduce non-specialists to a large swathe of astrophysics from a unifying perspective: star- forming regions, supernova, the creation of structure in the early universe, and other hot topics."--SciTech Book News